Erratum in

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

In Asians, mutations in the known maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) genes have been identified in only <15% of patients. These results were obtained mostly through studies on adult patients.

OBJECTIVE:

To investigate the molecular basis of Japanese patients with pediatric-onset MODY-type diabetes.

SUBJECTS:

Eighty Japanese patients with pediatric-onset MODY-type diabetes.

METHODS:

Mitochondrial 3243A>G mutation was first tested by the polymerase chain reaction restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis for maternally inherited families. Then, all coding exons and exon-intron boundaries of the HNF1A, HNF1B, GCK, and HNF4A genes were amplified from genomic DNA and directly sequenced. Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification analysis was also performed to detect whole-exon deletions.

RESULTS:

After excluding one patient with a mitochondrial 3243A>G, mutations were identified in 38 (48.1%) patients; 18 had GCK mutations, 11 had HNF1A mutations, 3 had HNF4A mutations, and 6 had HNF1B mutations. In patients aged <8 yr, mutations were detected mostly in GCK at a higher frequency (63.6%). In patients >9 yr of age, mutations were identified less frequently (45.1%), with HNF1A mutations being the most frequent. A large fraction of mutation-negative patients showed elevated homeostasis model assessment (HOMA) insulin-resistance and normal HOMA-β indices. Most of the HNF1B mutations were large deletions, and, interestingly, renal cysts were undetectable in two patients with whole-gene deletion of HNF1B.

CONCLUSION:

In Japanese patients with pediatric-onset MODY-type diabetes, mutations in known genes were identified at a much higher frequency than previously reported for adult Asians. A fraction of mutation-negative patients presented with insulin-resistance and normal insulin-secretory capacities resembling early-onset type 2 diabetes.